4.7 Article

Blunted hepcidin response to oral iron challenge in BFE-related hemochromatosis

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 110, Issue 12, Pages 4096-4100

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2007-06-096503

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Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [R01 DK 065029] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Telethon [GGP05024] Funding Source: Medline

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Inadequate hepcidin synthesis leads to iron overload in HFE-related hemochromatosis. We explored the regulation of hepcidin by iron in 88 hemochromatosis patients (61 C282Y/C282Y, 27 C282Y/H63D) and 23 healthy controls by analyzing urinary hepcidin before and 24 hours after a 65-mg oral iron dose. Thirty-four patients were studied at diagnosis and had iron overload, and 54 patients were iron depleted At diagnosis, hepcidin values in C282Y homozygotes were similar to controls, whereas values in C282Y/ H63D heterozygotes were higher (P =.02). However, the hepcidin/ferritin ratio was decreased in both homozygotes (P <.001) and heterozygotes (P =.017), confirming the inadequate hepcidin production for the iron load with both genotypes. In iron-depleted patients of both genotypes studied at a time remote from phlebotomy, basal hepcidin was still lower than in controls (P <.001 for C282Y/C282Y and P =.002 for heterozygotes). After an iron challenge, mean urinary hepcidin excretion increased in controls (P =.001) but not patients, irrespective of genotype and iron status. Significant hepcidin increase (>= 10 ng/mg creatinine) was observed in 74% of controls, 15% of homozygotes, and 32% of heterozygotes. The hepcidin response to oral iron is blunted in HFE-related hemochromatosis and not improved after iron depletion. The findings support the involvement of HFE in iron sensing and subsequent regulation of hepcidin.

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